ALICE CREISCHER
and
ANDREAS SIEKMANN:
Intervention Is Not A Closed Term
Date: Friday, 21 September, 2007
Time: 18:00
Location: The Munch Studio at Ekely
Jarlsborgvn. 14 / Gråbrødreveien 10, Oslo
Transport from Wergelandsveien 17 at 17:30.
Please be so kind as to send your intent to attend to info@oca.no. It would be helpful to receive your final R.S.V.P. by 20 September.
Informal reception to follow in the Munch Studio.
About the talk:
In the last decade "intervention" has become a well known term in the art world. It is connected with a special artistic practice and space in which "interventions" happen mostly in the public space. But perhaps these characteristics are pushing the term with this political approach in some kind of well bordered cliché of political art. The presentation attempts to interpret the term in another way and will also do so by showing examples of some recent projects by Creischer and Siekmann, including the Opera at Documenta.
About the artists:
In his works, Andreas
Siekmann discusses the process of economisation and
privatisation of public urban space. His drawings, models, videos,
exhibition projects and works in public space criticise and
ironically represent the dominating power relations and propose
alternative and counter-approaches.
Rather than concentrating on the production of individual
works, Alice Creischer centers on the
process of inquiry to illuminate particular political histories of
given contexts. Adopting prop-like devices and meticulously crafted
and sewn objects, Creischer choreographs a space within a system of
coordinates that deconstruct yet another set of given historical
relations. Extending beyond artistic production, Creischer has also
been prolific in her critical writings and curatorial projects.
The artists work both as a team and individually. Creischer and
Siekmann curated the exhibition projects Violence on the
Margin of All Things at the Generali Foundation in Vienna
(2002), and Ex-Argentina — Steps for the Flight from
Labour to Doing (2004) at Museum Ludwig in Cologne. They
participate at Documenta 12 in Kassel with the opera Auf
einmal und gleichzeitig. Eine Machbarkeitsstudie zur Negation von
Arbeit. Andreas Siekmann also participates at Skulptur
Projekte Münster 07, and Alice Creischer will participate in a solo
exhibition at MACBA in Barcelona in January 2009.
About the Edvard Munch Award for Contemporary Art
The Edvard Munch Award for Contemporary Art 2006 was awarded to Alice Creischer by H. M. Queen Sonja of Norway on 14 November 2006 at the University Aula.
The Edvard Munch Award for Contemporary Art was initiated and developed in 2004/2005 by the Office for Contemporary Art Norway to enhance exchange in international contemporary art and highlight the importance and ongoing influence of the Norwegian artist Edvard Munch (1863-1944). The award is the highest prize for international contemporary art given in Norway. Since its inception, the award has evolved into an important acknowledgment of artists whose practices engage critically with social and political issues and contexts. The award celebrates an exceptional attitude of Edvard Munch and his ability to translate what he sensed in society into his own artistic language. The award is intended to support the development of a new work and to cover living expenses during a six-month residency in Norway. The artist residency is situated within the Munch estate Ekely with an additional usage of the original Munch studio in Oslo, in addition to a grant of 350,000 NOK.
Office for Contemporary Art Norway
The Office for Contemporary Art Norway is a private foundation and was founded by The Norwegian Ministry of Culture and Church Affairs and The Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Fall 2001. The main aim of the Office for Contemporary Art Norway is to develop collaborations in contemporary art between Norway and the international art scene. The Office for Contemporary Art Norway aims to become a profiled contributor to the discourses of contemporary art.









